E. Vereli, K. Giotis, M. Digkas, A. Kalagatsis, Y. Karidi, O. Karalis, A.R. Kasapis, K. Lianos, A.P. Meletis, M. Stamatis, K. Stafylakis, E. Christodoulou, J. Fuller, T. Michael, A. Gonzalez Noguchi, C. Poniatowski, S. Streshna
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Project Info
- 💙 PLEX ATHENS
- 💚 Ioannis Pediotis
- 🖤 E. Vereli, K. Giotis, M. Digkas, A. Kalagatsis, Y. Karidi, O. Karalis, A.R. Kasapis, K. Lianos, A.P. Meletis, M. Stamatis, K. Stafylakis, E. Christodoulou, J. Fuller, T. Michael, A. Gonzalez Noguchi, C. Poniatowski, S. Streshna
- 💜 Ioannis Pediotis
- 💛 Konstantinos Lianos
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The exhibition Gut explores the poetics of underground existence – engaging with some of
the most powerful symbols of human origins and human destiny ever forged by the
imagination. It is dedicated to the dialogue between the visual and other arts with literature
and its theory. The exhibition is accompanied by a parallel program that develops and
reflects upon the main thematic axes of the exhibition, extending them into new fields. At its
core, four “archetypal” literary themes with a shared atmosphere are placed in juxtaposition:
the cave, the underbelly, the underground, and the tunnel. These are sites and forms of
depth and isolation, scenes where chthonic forces rupture inner enclosures and shape a
unified poetics of descent, dwelling, and emergence – but also of the reversibility between
above and below. The aim is to illuminate the similarities and differences among these four
motifs and, above all, to investigate the narrative and semantic variations that emerge when
they are activated within different historical and sociopolitical contexts – thus reveal ing
certain deconstructive, critical theoretical, and sociological readings of them. In this way, the
exhibition seeks to move beyond the stereotype of the claustrophobic psychological portrait
that often envelops the solitary hero of existential allegories; it at tempts to trace the points of
intersection between the grotesque and the absurd, and to view the “undergrounding” of
smaller or larger social groups –along lines of class, race, and gender– as both an indicator
of a shifting anthropological condition and a matrix for visions of technological futurity.
Through this comparative lens, the exhibition seeks to map the artistic and literary traces of
the underground experience, while at the same time tracing its metamorphoses as an
aesthetic and conceptual core of the contemporary imaginary.
Ioannis Pediotis